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To: Tenchusatsu who wrote (402651)7/29/2008 9:01:15 AM
From: Road Walker  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 1576601
 
"The shortfalls Obama would produce don't approach the size of the deficits John McCain's budget threatens to bring. The Republican candidate's tax cuts alone would increase the debt by $5 trillion by 2018, compared with $3.4 trillion for Obama, says the Tax Policy Center, another nonpartisan group."

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Obama's Small Spending Limits, Big Tax Cuts May Worsen Deficit

By Matthew Benjamin

July 29 (Bloomberg) -- Barack Obama, who says he's going to spend most of his presidential campaign talking about the domestic economy, bills himself as a fiscal disciplinarian.

``My plan is detailed and specific when it comes to cutting spending,'' the Democratic candidate said in a July 7 speech in St. Louis. ``In fact, all my new spending proposals would be more than paid for by spending reductions.''

Budget analysts from across the political spectrum disagree. His spending and tax-cut proposals, they say, would do little to curb runaway federal spending, resulting in more red ink at a time when the White House is already forecasting a record $482 billion budget deficit for next year.

``Clearly, this is not a spending-cut agenda,'' said Robert Bixby, executive director of the Concord Coalition, a Washington-based nonpartisan group that advocates budget restraint. ``You're likely to see continuing large deficits from the Obama plan.''

The shortfalls Obama would produce don't approach the size of the deficits John McCain's budget threatens to bring. The Republican candidate's tax cuts alone would increase the debt by $5 trillion by 2018, compared with $3.4 trillion for Obama, says the Tax Policy Center, another nonpartisan group.

Obama's proposed spending cuts would touch areas from student loans to Medicare to subsidies for wealthy farmers. Excluding health-care-related savings, they would total less than $30 billion -- 1 percent of the $3 trillion U.S. budget.

The plans ``sound good on paper but don't produce much,'' said Isabel Sawhill, an associate budget director during the Clinton administration.

`All Very Minor'

Sawhill, a scholar at the Brookings Institution in Washington, said the Obama spending cuts ``are all very minor.''

In some cases, the savings would just be recycled back into spending programs, which include universal health care and the doubling of funds to fight poverty.

The Illinois senator says he hopes to end the Iraq War within 16 months of taking office, though he would use most of the money saved to strengthen the military, increase veterans' benefits and bolster the war effort in Afghanistan. The U.S. spent about $165 billion last year in Iraq and Afghanistan.

``He'll increase the size of the standing army; that's part of what the Iraq money is going to,'' said Jason Furman, Obama's top economic adviser. Only a small portion of the money now spent in Iraq would go toward deficit-reduction, he said.

Washington Panel

Several members of an economic advisory panel convened by Obama, including former Treasury Secretary Lawrence Summers, said after a meeting with the candidate in Washington yesterday that stoking economic growth, not deficit reduction, should be Obama's top priority.

Most of Obama's cuts and spending programs would be phased in over four years. He would eliminate a student-loan program run by private lenders, saving taxpayers about $3 billion annually. Earmarks, or money set aside for lawmakers' pet projects, would be scaled back, saving about $9 billion, Furman said.

Government energy consumption would be reduced to save $1.5 billion a year, while Medicare would encourage the use of generic drugs and allow for the re-importation of medication, chopping $6 billion from that program's costs, Obama advisers say.

Like McCain, Obama, 46, promises to make government procurement more competitive and efficient. Obama would also close corporate loopholes and crack down on tax havens and no- bid government contracts.

``Barack Obama is committed to paying for all of his proposals and reducing the deficit,'' said Furman.

Medicare Cuts

The bulk of savings in his plan are health-care related. He would cut $15 billion in subsidies to a private Medicare coverage program and save tens of billions more by modernizing health-care information systems and insurance-payment processes.

Those savings would be used to lower the cost of the Democrat's most-expensive new program, extending health coverage, through tax credits, to most of the 47 million Americans who lack it. The price the campaign attaches to that project -- about $65 billion a year -- is unrealistic, analysts say.

``The savings estimates simply do not hold water,'' said Robert Laszewski, president of Health Policy and Strategy Associates in Alexandria, Virginia, who studied Obama's health plan. He estimates it will cost taxpayers well over $100 billion a year.

More Spending

In addition to extending President George W. Bush's tax cuts that went to Americans with incomes under $250,000 and reducing the tax burden for middle-income workers and seniors, Obama proposes increasing early-education programs by $18 billion a year and clean energy by an annual $15 billion, though the latter would be offset by revenue from carbon-emission permit auctions.

He would allocate an additional $6 billion for infrastructure improvements, $3.5 billion for a national service program, and $1.5 billion for paid-leave assistance. He would also double to $50 billion funds to fight global poverty, an expense the campaign says would be financed by ending the Iraq War.

Both Obama and McCain make their proposals look more responsible by using a ``baseline'' going forward that assumes Bush's tax cuts will be extended permanently. Under current law, the reductions will expire at the end of 2010. Making that assumption moves Obama's tax plan from the red into the black and provides funding for many of his new expenditures.

David Walker, former head of the Government Accountability Office, says he isn't impressed by McCain's or Obama's plans.

``The math doesn't work for either candidate,'' he said.

To contact the reporters on this story: Matthew Benjamin in Washington at mbenjamin2@bloomberg.net.

Last Updated: July 29, 2008 00:01 EDT



To: Tenchusatsu who wrote (402651)7/29/2008 12:36:24 PM
From: bentway  Respond to of 1576601
 
Firms Owe Billions In Unpaid Payroll Taxes

By REUTERS
nytimes.com
Filed at 11:59 a.m. ET

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - More than 1.6 million U.S. businesses owe the Internal Revenue Service more than $58 billion in unpaid taxes for Social Security, Medicare and unemployment insurance, a government watchdog agency said on Tuesday.

In a report to the Senate Homeland Security investigations subcommittee, the Government Accountability Office said the IRS fails to take full advantage of tools available to collect unpaid taxes and to prevent further cheating on payroll taxes.

"When businesses do not remit payroll taxes, they are using employees' money to fund business operations or the personal lifestyle of the businesses' owners," GAO Director of Financial Management and Assurance Steven Sebastian said in testimony to the committee.

This problem is a fraction of the estimated $300 billion or so in unpaid taxes each year that some members of Congress believe can be collected through tougher enforcement.

Payroll taxes are withheld from workers' wages by employers to fund the Social Security and Medicare retirement and health programs. Additional payroll taxes are collected to finance unemployment insurance. When the money is not passed on to the government, general revenues have to be tapped to make up for the loss to the programs' trust funds.

"Many of these businesses repeatedly failed to remit amounts withheld from employees' salaries," the GAO found.

Subcommittee Chairman Carl Levin, a Michigan Democrat, and Sen. Norm Coleman of Minnesota, the panel's top Republican, called on the IRS to beef up enforcement.

"IRS's pursuit of unpaid payroll taxes hasn't gotten the job done," Coleman said. "Rather than aggressively using the collection tools at their disposal, they seem content with hoping these tax deadbeats will come to their senses."

Deputy IRS Commissioner Linda Stiff told the committee that the agency collects 99.8 percent of payroll taxes owed, about $11 trillion over the last 10 years. The $58 billion in unpaid payroll tax debt as of September 2007, represents a 10-year total and $26 billion of that represents principal, with $32 billion in uncollected penalties and interest, she said.

Stiff said the IRS was refocusing efforts to use enforcement tools more effectively in payroll tax cases.

Payroll taxes represent a lion's share of the total revenues collected by the IRS. In 2007, the IRS collected $2.7 trillion in taxes. Of that, $1.7 trillion was payroll taxes, Stiff said.

Copyright 2008 Reuters Ltd.